|
|
|||||
|
Sir James George Frazer (1854–1941). The Golden Bough. 1922. The Golden Bough
I. The King of the Wood - § 3. Recapitulation
|
|||||
|
WE can now perhaps
understand why the ancients identified Hippolytus, the consort of Artemis,
with Virbius, who, according to Servius, stood to Diana as Adonis to
Venus, or Attis to the Mother of the Gods. For Diana, like Artemis, was a
goddess of fertility in general, and of childbirth in particular. As such
she, like her Greek counterpart, needed a male partner. That partner, if
Servius is right, was Virbius. In his character of the founder of the
sacred grove and first king of Nemi, Virbius is clearly the mythical
predecessor or archetype of the line of priests who served Diana under the
title of Kings of the Wood, and who came, like him, one after the other,
to a violent end. It is natural, therefore, to conjecture that they stood
to the goddess of the grove in the same relation in which Virbius stood to
her; in short, that the mortal King of the Wood had for his queen the
woodland Diana herself. If the sacred tree which he guarded with his life
was supposed, as seems probable, to be her special embodiment, her priest
may not only have worshipped it as his goddess but embraced it as his
wife. There is at least nothing absurd in the supposition, since even in
the time of Pliny a noble Roman used thus to treat a beautiful beech-tree
in another sacred grove of Diana on the Alban hills. He embraced it, he
kissed it, he lay under its shadow, he poured wine on its trunk.
Apparently he took the tree for the goddess. The custom of physically
marrying men and women to trees is still practised in India and other
parts of the East. Why should it not have obtained in ancient Latium? 1
|
|||||
|
|
|||||
|
|
|||||